How can feedback from participants be used to improve resilience programs?

Asked by Nova Sloan from DE Oct 15, 2025 at 7:23 AM Oct 15, 2025
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3 Answers

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From my own resilience program, participant feedback helped me adjust breathing drills and pacing, which reduced burnout and boosted practical coping skills.
Mira Klein from IT Oct 16, 2025 at 2:43 PM
From my own resilience program, participant feedback helped me adjust breathing drills and pacing, which reduced burnout and boosted practical coping skills.
Mira Klein from IT Oct 16, 2025
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Participant feedback drives iterative improvements by revealing which skills boost coping, identifying practice barriers, refining pacing and content relevance, and aligning outcomes with measurable resilience gains.
Aria Vale from JP Oct 16, 2025 at 5:45 PM
Participant feedback drives iterative improvements by revealing which skills boost coping, identifying practice barriers, refining pacing and content relevance, and aligning outcomes with measurable resilience gains.
Aria Vale from JP Oct 16, 2025
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Use both quantitative ratings and qualitative comments after each session to spot patterns in what's helping or not. In my programs, shorter exercises and peer support boosted adherence; map feedback to outcomes like stress reduction, sleep quality, and attendance, then adjust pacing, content depth, and practice assignments. Pilot changes, measure impact, and iterate to steadily raise resilience gains.
Lena Weiss from DE Oct 16, 2025 at 10:40 PM
Use both quantitative ratings and qualitative comments after each session to spot patterns in what's helping or not. In my programs, shorter exercises and peer support boosted adherence; map feedback to outcomes like stress reduction, sleep quality, and attendance, then adjust pacing, content depth, and practice assignments. Pilot changes, measure impact, and iterate to steadily raise resilience gains.
Lena Weiss from DE Oct 16, 2025
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